New Hampshire Supplements
This page contains materials designed by NHPLT to help New Hampshire educators teach about New Hampshire's amazing forests. The materials answer questions such as: How long do trees live in New Hampshire? Is all bark the same? Who owns New Hampshire's forests? What products are trees made into? How do we benefit from our forests? And more!
The Educator’s Guide to NH Forests is a series of fact sheets designed to help educators teach about New Hampshire's forests. Use them to supplement existing lessons and programs or to complement activities from the PLT PreK-8 Activity Guide or PLT Secondary Modules. Click here to access the fact sheets.
Focus on New Hampshire Forests provides details about our forests for the nine activities that are most popular among educators trained in PLT's PreK-8 Activity Guide. For all the activities, you will want to use the PLT PreK-8 Activity Guide and Focus on New Hampshire Forests together. Click here to access the materials.
Secondary Fact Sheets are designed to include provocative and balanced information and resource lists framing and examining contemporary environmental issues in the state. Topics presented in each factsheet have clear connections to activities in each of the current module topics, which address forest issues, forest ecology, municipal solid waste, and public health and environmental risk assessment. Click here to access the fact sheets.
The Project WEB newsletter is mailed to people who have attended a Project Learning Tree, Project WET or Project WILD workshop in New Hampshire. A joint publication of the three programs, each issue contains feature articles, a calendar of events, suggested activities and announcements about opportunities and resources available to NH educators. Click here to access Project WEB online.
Kinder Forest, Haverhill, NH